Henney v. New York Cent. & H. R. R.

200 F. 960, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1142
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 4, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 200 F. 960 (Henney v. New York Cent. & H. R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henney v. New York Cent. & H. R. R., 200 F. 960, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1142 (S.D.N.Y. 1912).

Opinion

RAY, District Judge.

The plaintiff is inventor and patentee of an alleged improved device for producing ozone from the atmosphere, and which device is known in the patent as an ozonizer. The application therefor was filed August 1, 1910, and the patent was issued November 8, 1910, No. 974,789. The defendant here, New York Central & Hudson River Railroad Company, has in use at its station in New York City a purification plant, and uses, it is claimed, 30 units or ozonizers, each of which infringes the plaintiff’s patented [961]*961ozonizer. In the complaint the plaintiff alleged the use of one machine with 10 units, and laid his damages at $500. On the trial it appeared by concession that defendant used 30 units, but it did not concede all 30 were alike, and, under the circumstances, the plaintiff being ignorant until then of the number of units used by the defendant, the court permitted an amendment alleging the use of 30 infringing units and claiming $1,500 damages.

The defendant denied the validity of the patent, its position being that, in view of the prior art, no invention is disclosed, and also denied infringement, conceding the plaintiff’s patent to be valid. A number of prior patents were put in evidence to show the prior art. I think the validity of the patent was a fair question of fact for the jury, and that, as there was a conflict of evidence, the verdict should not be disturbed on the ground that the validity of the patent was not proved. The question of infringement presents more difficulty, and defendant contends that on the uncon tradicled evidence or testimony in the case it appears that one or more of the essential elements of the ozonizer of the patent in suit is wanting in the defendant’s device or units, and that therefore the verdict is contrary to and unsupported by the evidence, and must be set aside.

Claim 3 of the patent in suit was the only one submitted to the consideration of the jury as infringed. The jury was told] they must find every element of that claim, or its allowable equivalent, present in one or more of the units of defendant’s apparatus, or the verdict must be for the defendant. The jury found infringement by the use of 30 units, and placed the damages at $1,500.

Claim 3 of the patent in suit to David S. Henney, for ozonizer, No. 974,789, reads as follows:

“The herein described apparatus for the production of ozone, comprising two similarly shaped open-end glass cylinders of different diameters, each cylinder provided with openings in its wall near one end, each cylinder provided with a layer of foil, one of said cylinders being of a less size than the other and occupying an inverted position with relation to the other, the smaller within the larger, means for closing’ one end of the device, means for admitting air to the other end of the device, and an electrode within the inner vessel.”

This apparatus for the production of ozone has as its elements: (1) Two similarly shaped open-end glass cylinders of different diameters, each cylinder provided with openings in its wall near one end; (2) each cylinder provided with a layer of foil; (3) one of said cylinders being of less size than the other and occupying an inverted position with relation to the other, the smaller within the larger; (4) means for closing one end of the device; (5) means for admitting air to the other end of the device; and (6) an electrode within the inner vessel. “Inner vessel” means the smaller glass cylinder of the lesser diameter within the larger of the greater diameter.

It is, and on the trial was, perfectly plain that defendant used) in its installation and apparatus for producing ozone two similarly shaped open-end glass cylinders of different diameters, each cylinder provided with openings in its wall near one end, and that one of said cylinders [962]*962was of less size than the other, and occupied an inverted position with relation to the other, the smaller within the larger, and that there was an electrode within the inner vessel, or cylinder. It was contended on the trial that the defendant’s cylinders were not provided with a layer of foil, but covered with a sort of aluminum compound of ground or pulverized metal, not answering to the definition of “foil,” and not coming within an allowable equivalent for “foil.” The evidence pro and con may be said to conflict; but the question was submitted to the jury, and it found, and I think correctly, that defendant’s cylinders were each provided with a layer of foil, or its allowable equivalent.

Defendant contends that its device or apparatus has no means for closing one end of the device with means for admitting air to the other end of the device; that air-is admitted at one end of its device or glass cylinders, and passes directly through between the walls of the inner globe and those of the outer globe, and hence through the electrical or electrified zone, and thence, duly ozonized, directly out and on through a duct, in a base on which it is mounted, to the water to be purified, and with which it is mixed; that therefore one end is not closed and the other open for admitting air, but that in fact both ends are open, inasmuch as the air enters at one end and passes out at the other end. On - the trial the defendant also contended that the , use by it of glass cylinders each with openings in its walls near one end! was unnecessary, and that such holes perform no function in its apparatus; that such cylinders with holes were used for the reason it could not procure cylinders without holes.

■The defendant contends that this is not the mode of operation of the plaintiff’s device or ozonizer; that in the apparatus of the pat- • ent the air is admitted at one end by means of a blower, and made to pass up through the interior of the inner or smaller glass cylinder . to near its top end, which end is sealed! or closed, and that the air is made to travel this course for the purpose of keeping the glass surfaces cool and avoid puncturing the walls; that the air then passes out through the holes in the walls of this inner or smaller cylinder near its upper end, into the space between the walls of the inqer cylinder. and the walls of the outer cylinder, but cannot escape from the apparatus at this end, opposite the end where it enters, as the upper end of the space between the two cylinders is closed or sealed; and that the air then passes down through the space measured by the walls of the two cylinders, and hence through the electrical or electrified zone, where it is ozonized, and thence out through the holes in the walls of the outer and larger cylinder.

The defendant claims that plaintiff’s device, as described in claim 3, performs two functions: (1) That it keeps all surfaces cool by forcing the air before being ozonized to pass through the inner and smaller cylinder; and (2) that it then ozonizes the air by forcing it through the space bounded by the walls of the two cylinders, and that both are essential and the necessary result of plaintiff’s combination, - while defendant does not cool the surfaces, as it does not pass the air ■ into and through the interior of the inner cylinder.

[963]*963The specifications of the patent contain the following:

“An annular plug 27 closes the spaee between the two vessels at their top. The blower j directs air through the neck of the outer vessel, the air passing upwardly and through the holes 21

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

R. C. Mahon Co. v. Newcomb-David Co.
46 F.2d 473 (E.D. Michigan, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
200 F. 960, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henney-v-new-york-cent-h-r-r-nysd-1912.